It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Originally posted by eight bits
But I think the deal killer is that a woman is shown teaching men, at the direct invitation of the Apostles to do so. We know that the faction who wrote the Pastorals won, and this whole scene is contrary to what their "Paul" wrote. It doesn't matter what Mary is depicted as saying, she doesn't have the canonized equipment to tell men anything they don't already know.
Peter said to Mary, Sister we know that the Savior loved you more than the rest of woman.
there is no Apostolic connection, unless one wanted to claim that Mary was an Apostle, which is troublesome nine ways from Tuesday, so there is at least one legitimate complaint against it.
That said, I'll throw a little twist in to the mix. I read recently (and now I can't find the source, lol) that the title character of The Gospel of Mary isn't Mary Magdalene, but rather is Mary, the mother of Jesus. In rereading it, there's nothing that jumps out at me to say that's impossible, so it's a bit thought provoking. A line like:
The downside, of course, is Mariology, which I'm assured dates back to the earliest days of the church. If there was a text that was attributed to mother Mary, we'd probably have a better preserved version of it.
reply to post by eight bits
Text Is Taussig right, that in its Twenty-first century Christianity needs a new canon, particularly one consciously selected by an open process which officially includes people of color and women?
Yes and no.-- Is that a cop out?
reply to post by eight bits
Text No, but I wonder whether there are books that you would add to or remove from the canonical New Testament that reflect your take on Christianity's first century or so.
Originally posted by BlueMule
Originally posted by JesuitGarlic
For a person who offers prayers to dead humans he calls holy, prayers to false gods that desired human sacrifice and turn out to be Lucifer in disguise, then I think your idea of truth and Christianity is fully warped and no authority to judge which direction it should go.
My authority to offer an opinion about which way Christianity should go comes from years of studying comparative religion, comparative mythology, comparative mysticism... and of course my mystical experiences seen in light of that tri-angulated, panoramic, cross-cultural view, and of course from being raised Catholic.
As opposed to the myopic, local, tiny view of ignorant uninitiated dogmatic fundamentalist fools.
The 4 Gospels are in contextual agreement.
The first 3 Gospels share more contextual agreement than the 4th.
I don't see it a stretch to refer to the whole she-bang as synoptic.
Unfortunately, many Gnostic-based faiths use this incident to support the heretical claim of men having the capability of becoming gods, rendering mankind's need for God and ultimately the whole notion of salvation itself, of no effect.
Deception is truly a subtle beast.
Which is the basis behind the Q theory... that being all three writers may have gotten the material from one source...
Originally posted by adjensen
reply to post by Akragon
Which is the basis behind the Q theory... that being all three writers may have gotten the material from one source...
Actually, one of the more reasonable theories is that Mark was written first, and then Luke and Matthew used Mark, supplemented by Q (and their own expansions of the basic statements found in Q.) My personal belief is that Matthew (the Apostle) wrote a now lost to us Gospel in Hebrew, which was summarized by Mark, used in conjunction with Q to produce Luke, and then translated, and modified in the translation, into the Greek Matthew that we now have.
However, it must be noted that Q is completely theoretical -- there is zero evidence that such a document actually existed.
Originally posted by Akragon
Actually I kinda prefer the idea that the Q theory points to direct witnesses to Jesus... instead of it being another text... Perhaps Q was actually Jesus himself...
Historians of early Christianity begin to appear like jigsaw puzzle solvers who are presented with twenty-seven pieces of a thousand piece puzzle and find that only six or seven of the pieces even fit together. The reasonable thing to do would be to put those pieces together, make some guess about what that part of the puzzle might be about, and then modestly decline over-speculation about the pieces that don't fit. These solvers, in contrast, throw away the central piece, the Acts of the Apostles, that enables any connections to be made at all. Then they insist on bringing in pieces from other puzzles. Finally, they take this jumble of pieces, sketch an outline of what the history ought to look like (on the basis of some universal puzzle pattern), and then proceed to reshape these pieces until they fit in that pattern. (Johnson, Luke Timothy, The Real Jesus, pg 95)